"Peasants" (russian: Мужики, translit=Muzhiki) is an 1897 novella by
Anton Chekhov. Upon its publication it became a literary sensation of the year, caused controversy (even the Chekhov admirer
Leo Tolstoy
Count Lev Nikolayevich TolstoyTolstoy pronounced his first name as , which corresponds to the romanization ''Lyov''. () (; russian: link=no, Лев Николаевич Толстой,In Tolstoy's day, his name was written as in pre-refor ...
labeled it "the crime against the people") but in retrospect is regarded as one of Chekhov's masterpieces.
[Rodionova, V.M. Commentaries to Мужики. The Works by A.P. Chekhov in 12 volumes. ]Khudozhestvennaya Literatura
Khudozhestvennaya Literatura (russian: Художественная литература) is a publishing house in Saint Petersburg, Russia. The name means "fiction literature" in Russian. It specializes in the publishing of Russian and foreign wor ...
. Moscow, 1960. Vol. 8, pp. 524-529
Publication
The novella was first published in the April 1897 issue of ''
Russkaya Mysl''. With minor changes and some additions to Chapter IX, it came out as a separate edition, first via
Alexey Suvorin Publishing House, then (also the same year) as part of the book called ''Peasants and
My Life My Life may refer to:
Autobiographies
* ''Mein Leben'' (Wagner) (''My Life''), by Richard Wagner, 1870
* ''My Life'' (Clinton autobiography), by Bill Clinton, 2004
* ''My Life'' (Meir autobiography), by Golda Meir, 1973
* ''My Life'' (Mosley a ...
''. With further minor edits, Chekhov included it into volume 9 of his Collected Works published by
Adolf Marks
Adolf Fyodorovich Marx (russian: Адо́льф Фёдорович Маркс; 2 February 1838 – ), last name also spelled Marcks and recently Marks, known as A. F. Marx, was an influential 19th-century German publisher in Russia best known fo ...
in 1899–1901.
Background
The story's plotline was based upon Chekhov's five-year stay in Melikhovo. In a 2 April letter he informed his brother Alexander: "In the April 1897 issue of ''Russkaya Mysl'' the novella will appear where I describe the fire that broke out in Melikhovo when you visited the place in 1895." Chekhov was finishing the story at the time of the all-Russia
census
A census is the procedure of systematically acquiring, recording and calculating information about the members of a given population. This term is used mostly in connection with national population and housing censuses; other common censuses in ...
which he took an active part in the organization of in Melikhovo. It was in those days he steeped himself totally into the lives of the local peasantry.
The first mention of "Peasants" dates back to 1 January 1897 when Chekhov wrote to Elena Shavrova from
Melikhovo: "I am busy, up to my throat: write and cross out, write and cross out again..."
When he started working on the novella is uncertain, but it was completed by the end of February 1897. On 1 March he wrote to
Alexey Suvorin: "How about this for a misfortune? Have written a story on the life of peasants, but they told me it won't pass censorship and has to be cut by half." The story was sent to ''Russkaya Mysl'' in mid-March; between 15th and 18th, according to Chekhov's two letters to
Viktor Goltsev.
Problems with censorship
On 2 April an issue of ''Russkaya Mysl'', which had been already sent to press, was submitted to the censor V. Sokolov for a review. In his report he wrote: "In the first part of the April volume of ''Russkaya Mysl'' there is a story by A.P. Chekhov called "Peasants" which demands special attention. In it the life of peasants in villages is depicted in exceedingly grim tones. Throughout summer they toil in fields from morning till late at night along with members of their families, and yet are unable to store bread even for half a year. Nearly dying of hunger because of that, almost all of them, nevertheless, are engaged in excessive drinking. For this they are ready to part with everything, even their last piece of clothes...
Their helplessness is aggravated by the immense burden of taxes which for peasants' families are unbearable.
The real curse for these peasants, or rather their families, is indeed their total ignorance. The majority of the muzhiks, if the author is to be believed, do not believe in God and are deaf to religion. Peasants long for light and knowledge but are unable to find the way to them on their own because very few of them can read or write at all. Most of them are seemingly unaware of the concept of literacy as such."
The censor came to the conclusion that, according to the author, peasants were now much worse off than they had been as serfs, for in those times "...at least they had been fed, while now what the authorities only do is rob them and punish". The second report that Sokolov sent to the Moscow Censorship Committee drew the same conclusions, and as a result the whole page 123 (containing part of Chapter IX) was withdrawn from the April issue of ''Russkaya Mysl''. The same year, though, Suvorin managed to publish the story as a separate edition with Chapter IX restored, even if in a slightly revised version.
Later, Chekhov's French translator Denis Rouche asked the author for the complete, uncensored version of the story. Chekov wrote in a 24 January letter to
Fyodor Batyushkov
Fyodor Dmitrievich Batyushkov (Фёдор Дмитриевич Батюшков, September 7 .s. August 26 1857, Kosma village, Tver Governorate, Russian Empire – March 19, 1920, Petrograd, Soviet Russia) was a Russian philologist, editor (''Ko ...
: "Rouche asks me to send him those fragments that have been cut by censorship. But there have been no such cuts. There was one chapter which never made its way either into the magazine or into the book. But there is no need to send this chapter to Paris." The 'chapter' in question has never been identified. The story was published in French in September 1897 in the fortnightly ''Quinzaine''. In 1901 it came out as a separate edition in Paris with illustrations by
Ilya Repin. The latter presented the original drawings to Chekhov who on 10 April 1901 passed donated them to the
Taganrog City Library.
Synopsis
Nikolai Chikildiyev, once a Moscow restaurant waiter, now a very ill man, decides to leave the city and with his pious, meek wife Olga and daughter Sasha goes to Zhukovo, his native village. They are shocked by the horrible state of the place, but have to settle into this murky and dangerous world of poverty, filth, ignorance, spitefulness and drunk violence. Things go from bad to worse, as at one point the fire destroys a house in the village (with locals watching helplessly and a guesting student taking upon himself the role of a lone firefighter), at another the police inspector comes to collect the arrears from the villagers and confiscate a
samovar
A samovar (russian: самовар, , literally "self-brewer") is a metal container traditionally used to heat and boil water. Although originating in Russia, the samovar is well known outside of Russia and has spread through Russian culture t ...
from the Chikildiyev's house. Finally, Nikolai dies (or rather gets killed by medical incompetence), and mother and daughter, almost happy now to leave all those horrors behind, set off to Moscow, begging for money on their way.
Reception
Russian literary historians regard ''Peasants'', with its vast and brutally realistic panorama of the life of low-class Russian rural community, as a revelatory event in the Russian literature of the 1890s. "Just finished your peasants. What a delight! Read it late in the evening in one gulp and couldn't fall asleep after it for a long time,"
Nikolai Leykin
Nikolai Alexandrovich Leykin (russian: Никола́й Алекса́ндрович Ле́йкин; December 19, 1841 – January 19, 1906) was a Russian writer, artist, playwright, journalist and publisher.
Biography
Leykin was born in Saint ...
wrote in a 29 April 1897 letter. Actor and dramatist
Alexander Yuzhin wrote in May 1897: "Your ''Peasants'' is the greatest piece of literature in the whole world in many years, at least as us Russians are concerned... Not a single false, maudlin note; everything is tragic truth,
rawnwith the overpowering strength of natural, Shakespearian palette, as if you were not a writer, but the Nature itself." In a May 1897 letter
Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko
Vladimir Ivanovich Nemirovich-Danchenko (russian: Владимир Иванович Немирович-Данченко; , Ozurgeti – 25 April 1943, Moscow), was a Soviet and Russian theatre director, writer, pedagogue, playwright, producer an ...
wrote:
"I've read ''Peasants'' with enormous mental tension... Judging by the reaction from here and there you haven't had such a success for a very long time."
The praise, though, was far from unanimous.
Leo Tolstoy
Count Lev Nikolayevich TolstoyTolstoy pronounced his first name as , which corresponds to the romanization ''Lyov''. () (; russian: link=no, Лев Николаевич Толстой,In Tolstoy's day, his name was written as in pre-refor ...
, who felt great affection for Chekhov the writer, but tended to idealize the patriarchal 'foundations' of Russian rural community, felt deeply offended.
Viktor Mirolyubov
Viktor Sergeyevich Mirolyubov (russian: Виктор Серге́евич Миролюбов, 22 January 1860, Moscow, Russian Empire – 26 October 1939, Leningrad, USSR) was a Russian journalist, editor and publisher. Having started out as an ...
in his 1900 diaries quoted Tolstoy as saying: "His ''Peasants'' is a sin against the people, he doesn't know the Russian man." In 1898 Chekhov became a member of the Union of Support for the Russian Writers, but all but failed to pass the voting stage because of the hostile reaction to ''Peasants'', according to
Alexey Suvorin who left a note on this accident in his April 1898 diary. Sharply negative reviews came from ''Novosti i Birzhevaya Gazeta'' (1897, No. 118, 1 May, by Skriba), ''Sankt-Peterburgskiye Vedomosti'' (1897, No.114, 29 April, N. Ladozhsky) and ''Moskovskiye Vedomsti'' (1897, No.114, 29 April, K. Medvedsky).
Still, the story became the major literary event of the late 1890s. "It's hard to remember a work of fiction that would enjoy such astounding and well-deserved success as Chekhov's ''Peasants''. Looking for comparisons, we would have to go back to the times when a new novel by Tolstoy or Dostoyevsky would come out," wrote (the anonymous) ''
Severny Vestnik
''Severny Vestnik'' (russian: Се́верный ве́стник, en, The Northern Messenger) was an influential Russian literary magazine founded in Saint Petersburg in 1885 by Anna Yevreinova, who stayed with it until 1889.
History
In the e ...
'' reviewer in the No.6, 1897 issue.
The major magazines and newspapers published reviews on it, although, according to biographer Rodionova, most of them were superficial and focused mainly on retelling the plot. One notable example was an insightful essay by the ''Nedelya'' critic Mikhail Menshikov in the May, No.5, 1897 issue of ''Knizhki Nedeli'' (Books of the Week). "Chekhov's story is the immense step ahead in the science of the people, arguably, the most important of all sciences. In it lies the social significance of this artful piece," the author argued. Positive reviews came also from
Ignaty Potapenko (as Fingal) in ''
Novoye Vremya'',
Angel Bogdanovich
Angel Ivanovich Bogdanovich (russian: А́нгел Ива́нович Богдано́вич, October 14 .s. 2 1860, Haradok, Vitebsk Governorate, Russian Empire (modern Belarus) - April 6 .s. March 24 1907, Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire) was ...
in ''
Mir Bozhy
''Mir Bozhiy'' (God's World, Мир божий) was a Russian monthly magazine published in Saint Petersburg in 1892–1906. It was edited first by Viktor Ostrogorsky (1892-1901), then by Fyodor Batyushkov (1902-1906). In July 1906 ''Mir Bozhiy' ...
'', and
Ieronim Yasinsky
Ieronim Ieronimovich Yasinsky (russian: Иерони́м Иерони́мович Яси́нский; April 18 (30), 1850 – December 31, 1931) was a Russian novelist, poet, literary critic and essayist. Among the numerous pseudonyms he used, we ...
in ''
Birzhevyie Vedomosti''.
[Биржевые ведомости, 1897, №119, 3 мая]
The novella inspired a heated discussion between
Pyotr Struve
Peter (or Pyotr or Petr) Berngardovich Struve (russian: Пётр Бернга́рдович Стру́ве; pronounced ; 26 January 1870 in Perm – 22 February 1944 in Paris) was a Russian political economist, philosopher, historian and edito ...
, writing for ''
Novoye Vremya'', and
Nikolai Mikhaylovsky (''
Russkoye Bogatstvo
''Russkoye Bogatstvo'' (russian: Русское богатство, Russian Wealth) was a monthly literary and political magazine published in St. Petersburg, Russia
Russia (, , ), or the Russian Federation, is a transcontinental cou ...
''). Struve praised it for what he saw as "the condemnation of the pathetic moralizing of
narodniks
The Narodniks (russian: народники, ) were a politically conscious movement of the Russian intelligentsia in the 1860s and 1870s, some of whom became involved in revolutionary agitation against tsarism. Their ideology, known as Narodism, ...
". Mikhaylovsky criticized Chekhov for giving too much attention to details and caring little for "clear ideological standpoints".
References
External links
Мужики the original Russian text
*
Peasants
A peasant is a pre-industrial agricultural laborer or a farmer with limited land-ownership, especially one living in the Middle Ages under feudalism and paying rent, tax, fees, or services to a landlord. In Europe, three classes of peasants ...
, two English translations
{{Authority control
Novellas by Anton Chekhov
Works originally published in Russian magazines
1895 novels